Although our recent blast of artic air in Pennsylvania may seem like nothing to our friends in the great white north, hitting single digits (Fahrenheit) nightly is sure plenty cold for me. ...and it brings with it some other interesting issues.

Over the weekend I decided to wake my 4104 from hibernation and take her out for some exercise. An engine block heater with a freshly inframed 6-71 is a wonderful thing. At 18F degreees, she fired right up without even a hint of smoke. (grin)

So there I sit in the driver's seat waiting for the air pressure to come up. wait .... wait.... wait... Soon, it became apparent that my air pressure needle wasn't moving off zero, nor did it have any intention of doing so. (disappearing grin) A few more minutes of idling, and it was time to face the facts: I'm not going anywhere, and I turn the ENGINE RUN switch to OFF. Duh. Without air pressure she keeps purring right along. Put her in gear, let the clutch out, intentional stall.

Fortunately, I was at home with no immediate need to go anywhere. Just an aborted joy ride. But now looking back on things, I seemed to recall that it did the exact same thing once last winter.

My guess is I have ice in my compressed air lines somewhere, which brings me to a bunch of questions

Is this a problem others have encountered?

I seem to remember finding a can of air line antifreeze stuff left in one of the bays by the previous owner. Haven't ever used any in the 6 years I have owned her, though. Do you guys use the stuff, and exactly what do you do with it? Somebody educate me, please.

I'm going to suggest you also learn how to manually shut down the engine using the fuel shutoff lever rather than stalling it in gear. I have to think putting that kind of torque on non-moving parts can't be good for them, especially when they get that cold.

Thanks for the input Nick & Craig. To answer some of the questions, I don't believe I have an air dryer or if I do, it is certainly well hidden somewhere. I do have tank drains, and although I make a point of draining them periodically, I don't do it every trip. I only ever get small amounts of liquid out, and if there is pressure in the tank when I drain it, what comes out is more like a mist than a stream.

I don't have the tanks in front of me at the moment, but if I recall correctly, the only fitting at the bottom of the tank is the drain. All other connections are higher up. So even if I had a couple of tablespoons of water lying in the bottom of the tank, I'm not picturing how that would block the air flow and prevent filling of the tank. Maybe water collects somewhere else?

If if ever does get above freezing, like maybe around May, I'll certainly make a point of draining them. In the meantime I'll keep checking this thread to see if anyone can provide any more info on the air line antifreeze stuff and how it gets put into the air system. If the answers do not turn up here, I can place that call to Luke.

WEC4104,Do you know where the fresh air intake is for your compressor? If so take the air line antifreeze you have , open the bottle and get it as close to the open air intake as possible. It should draw it in by suction, but sometimes you have to form a funnel or such and pour it in to get it in! Once it goes into the compessor it'll be forced thru the lines and clear a path where ever the blockage is! BK

An interesting subject, would anyone have an idea of the cost to add this to a 4106 ? or is this too large to get into the engine compartment? Does an air dryer solve all moisture concerns in the air system? Denis

Denis,The air dryer in my 4106 is located in the bay under the drivers seat. seems to work fine from that location. If you have one, you would know it, it pops off occasionally when it hits its limit.JimCallaghan

WEC, When you drain the air tanks, they need to drain until the mist is gone not just the water you can see. I will leave my valve cracked open and drive for a couple hours before winter sets in. The bottle of air brake alcohol is to be used in a couple of different ways. Before the cold weather sets in take the line off the compressor that goes to the wet tank. (its the only pressure line there) Hold the line up in the air and pour half the bottle of alcohol into the line. Make sure the tank valve is closed so you don't pour the alcohol on the ground. It will run into the wet tank and work its way thru out the air system. Use the wipers brakes etc. and after 8+ hrs you can drain the system. If you do that once or twice before winter comes, you won,t have a freeze problem all winter, just keep the tanks drained at the end of each use. The other use for that alcohol is in an emergency. It goes in the same place, (pressure line to tanks) Put it in now and it will thaw the lines out, and you should be fine Wa

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It probably still has the aircompressor muffler on it. It should be found close to the compressor on the main air line from the compressor. It should also have a petcock on the bottom of it. It is there to quiet down the compressor pulses and also capture some of the water/oil stuff on the way to the wet tank. If you haven't drained it, it is most likely full of crud and is probably frozen solid. If it is, it won't let ANY air from the compressor to the tanks. Try heating it up with a propane torch and open the petcock to drain the crap out of it.

My 4104 has a plastic bottle mounted next to the air compressor that you pour the air line antifreeze in. It slowly sucks it in. The previous owner put a label on the dash that instructs you to check it every 2000 miles. I've only been putting it in during the winter.

I have an air chuck between the muffler (after the compressor) before the wet tank on my MC-5 that I use for airing up the system before startup and to connect my emergency electric compressor. This fall, I drained all four tanks and then dumped a bottle of air brake alcohol into a portable air tank; pumped it up to 100 psi, turned it upside down and plugged it into the air chuck thereby forcing alcohol into the wet tank and throughout the system. Then fired up the Detroit and took her for a ride to distribute the alcohol through the system. Haven't really used it in the cold more than once so I'm not sure it helped but it sure seemed like a great idea to me

Another guy told me not to use that alcohol because it dries out the seals and airbags etc. etc. Has anyone heard that?

Years ago I had several GMs 4106 2 4107s that didn't have air dryer like my MCIs. There used to be a contraption that fit in engine compartment that went inline in air system with an alcohol container that evaporated the moisture . Used to work pretty good, don't know if they are still available.